The abundance of a chemical element measures how common the element is, or how much of the element there is.
Most standard matter is found in the form of atoms, although there are many other unusual kinds of matter.
Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the known Universe; helium is second. However, after this, the rank of abundance does not continue to correspond to the atomic number; oxygen has abundance rank 3, but atomic number 8. All others are orders of magnitude less common.
Both helium-3 and helium-4 were produced in the Big Bang, during a process known as big bang nucleosynthesis. Additional helium is produced by the fusion of hydrogen inside stellar cores by a variety of processes including the proton-proton chain and the CNO cycle.
Hydrogen and helium are estimated to make up roughly 80% and 20% of all the matter in the universe respectively. Despite comprising only a very small fraction of the universe, the remaining "heavy elements" can greatly influence astronomical phenomena. Only about 2% of the Milky Way galaxy's disk is comprised of heavy elements.
These other elements are generated by stellar processes. In astronomy, a "metal" is any element other than hydrogen or helium. This distinction is significant because hydrogen and helium (together with trace amounts of lithium) are the only elements that occur naturally without the nuclear fusion activity of stars. Thus, the "metallicity" of a galaxy or other object is an indication of past stellar activity.
See also: Stellar population
Many of the elements shown in the graphic are classified into (partially overlapping) categories:
Note that there are two breaks where the unstable, and very rare (as they are only produced through the fission of heavy radioactive elements (for example, uranium or thorium)), technetium (atomic number: 43) and promethium (atomic number: 61) would be. There are also breaks where the six noble gases would be as they are found in the Earth's crust due to decay chains from radioactive elements and are therefore not included. The six very rare, highly radioactive elements (polonium, astatine, francium, radium, actinium and protactinium) have such low natural abundances that they are not included or their natural adundances are not known as they are so low.
Oxygen and silicon are notably common; they form several common silicate minerals.
Differences in abundances of individual rare earth elements in the upper continental crust of Earth represent the superposition of two effects, one nuclear and one geochemical. First, rare earth elements with even atomic numbers (58Ce, 60Nd, ...) have greater cosmic and terrestrial abundances than adjacent rare earth elements with odd atomic numbers (57La, 59Pr, ...). Second, the lighter rare earth elements are more incompatible (because they have larger ionic radii) and therefore more strongly concentrated in the continental crust than the heavier rare earth elements. In most rare earth deposits, the first four rare earth elements - La, Ce, Pr, and Nd - constitute 80 to 99% of the total.
According to the above graphic, argon, a significant if not major component of the atmosphere, does not appear in the crust at all.
| Element | in Organisms | in Universe |
|---|---|---|
| Hydrogen | 80 - 250 | 10000000 |
| Carbon | 1000 | 1000 |
| Nitrogen | 60 - 300 | 1600 |
| Oxygen | 500 - 800 | 5000 |
| Sodium | 10 - 20 | 12 |
| Magnesium | 2 - 8 | 200 |
| Phosphorus | 8 - 50 | 3 |
| Sulfur | 4 - 20 | 80 |
| Potassium | 6 - 40 | 0,6 |
| Calcium | 25 - 50 | 10 |
| Manganese | 0,25 - 0,8 | 1,6 |
| Iron | 0,25 - 0,8 | 100 |
| Zinc | 0,1 - 0,4 | 0,12 |
* number of atoms for a thousand carbon atoms.
Reference: H. A. Harper, V. W. Rodwell, P. A. Mayes, Review of Physiological Chemistry, 16th ed., Lange Medical Publications, Los Altos, California 1977.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Abundance of the chemical elements".
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